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Something more or less like this in terms of the elements… snippet, issue title, cover thumbnail, page thumbnail with snippet location highlighted…Ī typical use-case would be, for instance, a set of 50 hobbyist magazine back-issues. The only thing being served from search would be Google Books-like snippets of text and page. This would allow public searching across a set of uploaded PDFs, but the actual PDFs would not be made public. A dated ideaĪ WordPress plugin is needed that lets small publishers and copyright-owners easily and cheaply offer a Google Books-like experience. So… for now the old QuiteRSS is still the best there is on the Windows desktop. Oh well, RSS Guard looked slick and sounded fast but… uninstalled. But then it fatally crashed when it went to load the OPML feed-bundle. Uninstalled, reinstalled, and this time an OPML import option was offered on startup. It was a very generic detection and I permitted it, reluctantly. But then my anti-virus did its own pop-up and blocked RSS Guard, anyway. Turns out it’s completely impossible to import an OPML, if you skip past the popup window at the start.
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I was then utterly stumped as to how to import the OPML. You can also now block all cookies (Top menu-bar | Tools | Settings | Network | “Do not accept …”). It appears to have caught up with the No.1 RSS desktop freeware QuiteRSS (development stalled), at least in speed, by introducing parallel feed updating.
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My search of news also brought details of changes in standalone desktop readers, gHacks reports this week that RSS Guard update brings massive performance boost. * Brave’s “privacy-preserving newsreader” still doesn’t appear to have a desktop version, despite promises back in the summer. So far as I can tell from news searches, it hasn’t happened yet.
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* Google Chrome announced in August a planned port of their Android Chrome RSS feedreader to the desktop version of the browser. * The Vivaldi browser already has a nice one, though limited and not standalone (it’s inside Vivaldi Mail). However, the search did make me aware that several Web browsers are now shipping an RSS feedreader in the default package, or plan to… Nor, so far as I can tell or find, does SeaMonkey yet have a Dark Mode - except for the Web browser via a plugin. Regrettably it can’t just be used as desktop RSS reader, as that’s integrated with Mail and not in its own panel. And if you really need it, the browser plugin FireFTP is compatible. The only thing it seems to lack is FTP, but these days you might be more likely to do that through a Web dashboard. It’s an all-in-one software with a Web browser (now Firefox based), email client, newsgroup and RSS readers, HTML editor with javascript debugger, and IRC chat. Old-school Internet users will recall this suite from the Netscape / Yahoo years.
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Great to see that the old SeaMonkey freeware has re-started development, and since Spring 2020 has been vigorously releasing updates.
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